French and Spanish intelligence aided NSA spying - report

Electronic surveillance which the European media and politicians blamed on the NSA was also carried out by their own intelligence services, as part of a wide-ranging allied security effort, according to US officials.

European spy agencies collected phone records in war zones and
areas outside their borders and shared information with the NSA,
US officials said on Tuesday, as part of wider efforts to protect
allied soldiers and civilians, according to a report in the Wall
Street Journal.

This is a markedly different version of events to what has been
reported in Europe and throws up questions about the level of
European involvement in global surveillance.

However, these efforts are separate to the US program which
targeted foreign leaders, including Angela Merkel.

There has so far been no comment from either the French or
Spanish authorities or from the NSA.

Over the last few days French and Spanish newspapers have cited
documents provided by the former NSA contractor Edward Snowden
that the NSA hacked into massive quantities of phone records in
those countries.

Le Monde said the documents showed that 70 million French phone
records had been tapped between December 2012 and January 2013.
While El Mundo in Spain reported that the NSA had swept up 60
million calls over the same period in Spain.

But James Clapper, the director of National Intelligence said
that the notion that the NSA had eavesdropped on the phone calls
of 70 million French citizens was false and that the allegations
were based on “inaccurate and misleading information regarding
US foreign intelligence activities.” But he didn’t provide
any other explanation.

US intelligence officials have, according to the Wall Street
Journal, privately said that the disclosures by the European
press put them in a difficult position. They are keen to put the
record straight but to do so would expose the activities of their
allies’ intelligence activities.

US officials also say that the leaked documents that the Le Monde
story was based on were not supplied by the NSA, but rather were
NSA data received from French intelligence. The US reached the
conclusion that the phone records the French had collected were
from outside France and were then shared with the NSA. There was
a similar story for the documents citied in El Mundo, the
officials said.

There are considerable diplomatic sensitivities of outing partner
services, which the NSA relies on for a considerable amount of
intelligence. A public exposure of European complicity may spark
domestic outrage in Europe and threaten co-operation with the US
in future.